Is It 'Treason' To Support Free Trade?
Shipping industry insiders floated a recommendation to charge critics of the Jones Act with treason, according to documents obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request.

At least one member of a federal advisory panel thinks it's "treason" to oppose a law that protects the domestic shipping industry from foreign competition, even though the result of that law is higher prices for American consumers.
Documents that the Cato Institute obtained from the U.S. Department of Transportation's Maritime Administration (MARAD) through the Freedom of Information Act in October included a March 2019 set of recommendations from the Marine Transportation System National Advisory Committee, which includes industry and union representatives. Among other things, the document suggested that the government "charge all past and present members of the Cato and Mercatus Institutes [sic] with treason." Their crime: opposing continued enforcement of the Jones Act, a.k.a. the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, which requires that ships transporting cargo between U.S. ports be made, owned, and crewed by Americans.
For years, the Cato Institute and George Mason University's Mercatus Center have urged Congress to repeal the Jones Act, which raises the cost of goods shipped to distant parts of the United States, such as Hawaii, Alaska, and Puerto Rico. The law also slows recovery from hurricanes, leaving residents without fuel, food, and other vital goods. But domestic shipping industry magnates and unions have the ear of lawmakers and, it turns out, the government agency that is supposed to oversee them.
The documents that Cato obtained included 2019 communications from MARAD officials who were trying to prevent Puerto Rico and Massachusetts from getting waivers to import liquefied natural gas via foreign ships. They sought those waivers because so few American ships were available.
The advisory committee's recommendations demanded "unequivocal support of the Jones Act." The eyebrow-raising "treason" allegation shows "the industry and the agency that regulates it working hand and glove together to squelch criticism of the law," says Scott Lincicome, director of Cato's Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies. "There is an established pattern of pro–Jones Act collusion between the maritime industry and the government agency charged with regulating them. It's not in any way subtle."
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Is It 'Treason' To Oppose Protectionism?."
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It is not treason to retain classified documents at an unsecured location funded by a hostile foreign nation when you did not have security clearance, so criticizing the Jones Act should be ok. It is a 1A thing.
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As more of these “classified” documents are found, I begin to wonder just how expansive the category of “classified” material has become. For all we know these “classified” documents could be nothing more than Biden’s dinner menu and the schedule of Trump’s hair appointments.
Free trade folks have been jonesing to act on removing this.
And unions screaming to keep it in place; they'd be Jonesing without it.
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Gotta keep up with the joneses.
Me and Mrs. Jones got a thing going on...
Puerto Rico would be a Panamax-sized economy with hurricane-force winds at its back if The Jones Act weren't hanging around it's neck like a dead arbitrage.
Interesting. If expressing support for changing or repealing a law constitutes treason, there's a hell of a lot of legislators that are guilty of treason. Say, doesn't Joe Biden support changing some laws? Impeach him for treason!
Almost no legislators support changing or repealing laws. They mostly support adding new laws on top of existing ones.
Exactly. Government is a one-way ratchet.
I just wish people would stop calling it free trade when one or both of the actors is not acting in a free trade manner.
I just wish people would stop calling it "food" when SOME so-called "food" contains food poisoning! Which can (and does) even KILL people!!!
STOP with this MURDEROUS promotion of this so-called "food" thing, JesseBahnFuhrer!!!
Squirrels munch on nuts.
So does shrike. Just unripened ones.
Dude, the magazine consistently fails to differentiate ‘intra-‘ from ‘inter-‘ and ‘Federated State’ from ‘Sovereign State’ from ‘Polity State’ on the issue.
You’re asking people who can’t or won’t distinguish ‘foul’ from ‘fowl’, ‘center’ from ‘right’, and ‘guard’ from ‘defense’ to call a game of basketball fairly/accurately.
“That’s not over-and-back, it’s cabotage! Unless the team currently playing defense does it.” – Reason
Edit: “Oh come on! The out of bounds line is just a social construct! It’s oppressive to only allow the away team 5 players on the court!” – Reason
Running it into the ground because it’s the analogy they deserve: “If we’d just get more Yao Mings, Lebron Jameses, Shaquille O’Neals, Manute Bols, and Dwyane Wades on the floor, guys like Buggsy Mogues and Spud Webb would finally be able to excel and the game would be better as a whole!” – Reason
It’s irrelevant how ‘other actors’ behave.
The point of free trade is maximizing specialization and comparative advantage – not mutual competition.
Countries are supposed to only make things that they produce better than everyone else – not make everything and compete everywhere.
It’s not the US competing with China to make better broomsticks – it’s zero broomsticks made in the US, and zero computer-operating-system-software made in China, and we exchange what we have for what they don’t.
It is to the immense overall benefit of the US, that inefficient & union-corrupted manufacturing activities be outsourced, while our economy focuses on white-collar occupations.
Individual citizens are then expected to adapt their skills to provide what the market demands - not beg for government bailouts/tariffs/subsidies because they are too lazy to crack a textbook.
Manufacturing is not inefficient and union-corrupt by nature. Unionization among all but government workers has been falling for decades.
At the same time, manufacturing jobs have been falling for decades as American manufacturing industries become more efficient and productive. US manufacturing $$$ volume has been increasing for decades. As Don Boudreaux of Cafe Hayek puts it, American manufacturing workers get their high pay because they operate such efficient expensive productive machinery and are worth it, as compared to, say, inefficient old-fashioned clothing factories in third world countries.
It’s irrelevant how ‘other actors’ behave.
You mean aside from the 'free' and the 'trade' that is. Otherwise, 'other actors' is requisite to trade and the voluntary nature of their behavior is requisite to 'free'.
None of which is to say anything about The Jones Act, market competition, political/legal competition, or comparative advantage; just pointing out that you start your argument by inverting logic and causailty at first principles by effectively stating "not giving is taking" or "wet roads cause rain". Two governments putting guns to their respective peoples' heads to produce complimentary goods that the governments exchange freely between themselves is 'free trade' by your definition.
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It IS free trade even when unilateral. Unilateral free trade has worked in practice, in addition to the usual theoretical "studies".
In addition, free trade is liberty in action.
And finally, free trade doesn't depend on treaties or the good will of others.
It IS justice even when socially modified. Social justice has worked in practice, in addition to the usual theoretical "studies". And finally, social justice doesn't depend on the treaties or the good will of others.
...
It IS fair taxation even when progressive. Progressive taxation has worked in practice, in addition to the theoretical "studies". And finally, progressive taxation doesn't depend on treaties or the good will of others.
You and I may share a conception of free trade, like indentured servitude, that doesn't mean everyone else thinks that's different from slavery or feelance contractual employment, whether they ultimately desire, or think they desire, to proliferate or eliminate those labor constructs or not.
No, despite your assertion free trade does depend on a good will/good faith/common understanding of what the word 'free' means. Otherwise, 'free trade' is indistinguishable from 'assimilation'.
No it is not equivalent to assimilation.
Tariffs are a tax on your own people; counter-productive.
If China taxes its people to make stuff cheaper for us so we have more money left to buy other things, why should we object? Don't bring up predatory pricing to drive our businesses out of business; that has been proven to not work with monopolies and it doesn't matter whether the fiend is a domestic business or foreign nation.
The more a country taxes itself to subsidize our purchases, the more inefficient its own economy, the less money it has to develop its own economy, the less money its people have to buy their own domestic production.
Unilateral free trade is always a win.
Unilateral free trade is always a win.
“A robber stealing your wallet with a gun isn’t theft, it’s just unilateral free trade without a common understanding of the word ‘free’. Free trade is always a win.” – Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf
You might say I’m arguing out of bad faith or ill will, but that’s just because you’re a bigoted protectionist.
Yes, tariffs are taxes on your own people, a tax on consumption that also helps reduce the deficit and level the playing field between domestic and foreign producers.
All of that makes tariffs good.
No, it’s not “free trade”’ when unilateral.
Furthermore, comparative advantage doesn’t work unless all participants have free markets and goods, services, and money can move freely between all participants.
What you erroneously call “free trade” Is a form of rent seeking and mercantilism.
"Marine Transportation System National Advisory Committee"
I know one way we could reduce federal spending
++
Better acronyms?
I wish they'd stop using the word treason so much. It has become the new "racism" and just as meaningless.
You speak treason!
Racist
Ain't that a fact.
In fairness, more judicious use of the words 'allegedly' or 'asserted' would enhance Reason's jurinalisming immensely.
That is, until someone's actually charged with treason and/or there's a law on the books, it's just a free speech issue between third-tier government mouthpieces AFAICT.
It’s fascist to suggest that “racism” and “treason” have become meaningless terms.
Their crime: opposing continued enforcement of the Jones Act, a.k.a. the Merchant Marine Act of 1920
There's lots of laws I oppose. I wonder which one they'll charge me with treason for.
The advisory committee's recommendations demanded "unequivocal support of the Jones Act.
Remember when Uber and Lyft came on the scene, and the cab cartels were flipping out? This is like that, once several orders of magnitude larger.
I can't find the recommendations and Reason conveniently fails to link to it, so I think the 'document' that contains the word 'treason' is NOT part of the official recommendations and is merely someone or agency making an idiotic suggestion that is not part of the official recommendation.
Although it’s impossible for us to determine who made this request and whether MARAD ever considered it (we should hope not), the situation remains deeply troubling. First, it’s undeniably true that someone who sits among government officials in meetings with MTSNAC suggested charging American citizens with treason, a federal crime punishable by death, due to their political speech. This is manifestly antithetical to the values of a free society.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_ZQgodnQvoq8ZPLp6mZl04Kot3sLjcGZ/view
The statement "Charge all past and present members of the Cato and Mercatus Institutes with treason. The President inform the Heritage Institute that he will personally disavow them if they continue to advocate against the Jones Act" appears on Page 40 of the document (Page 54 if you open it in Google Docs).
The real problem wasn't with them alleging treason, it was alleging treason outside Hunter Biden's laptop or one of Biden's classified document stashes. If they'd alleged it in either one of those places, there'd be no 1A issue and Reason would just be getting uppity about Hunter Biden's dick pics.
Trump's FBI had the actual Hunter laptops in 2019...
If there was actual evidence of a crime on there, something could have been done about it that wouldn't involve Rudy skulking around with a USB drive he 'claims' is an accurate copy (only a moron would believe that, of course!), a month before the election.
Trump’s FBI had the actual Hunter laptops in 2019…
Huh. I didn't even mention Trump or Joe or Barack or Democrats or Republicans. As if it were all indistinguishably immaterial to what I was saying.
So, let me get this straight--
Somebody recommended something several years ago, possibly in the last administration, maybe, we don't know because so little journalism was done that this 'article' reads like unfinished homework done by a second grader.
And? So? What's going on now?
Or is this just another 'pay attention to this thing' piece to distract from the ongoing revelation that Biden was illegally sharing classified information with the Chinese?
Only in your weird little world is 'Biden sharing classified information with the Chinese'....
The Clinton administration beat him to it with our missile secrets.
The Jones Act has essentially driven US shipbuilding firms completely out of global markets, such that they can only survive in their current form if they continue to receive an unjust government preference for domestic-use ship construction.
It should have been scrapped decades ago.
And the Constitution is very specific about what constitutes treason – precisely because the Founders had experience with the British government declaring opposition viewpoints ‘treasonous’ as a means to squelch debate.
“It’s treason!” Said the union boss predating on his fellow citizens…
very informative article
If only Reason pushed for Domestic free trade like it does foreign trade. OMG! 10% Tarriff... End of the world end of the world. 30% domestic tax --- well.. not good but OMG! Foreign trade! /s
There is absolutely no positive impact to any tariff or protectionist measure.
They all harm the US economy grievously. The Jones Act is a great example.
Ya know like Domestic "protectionist measures".... BUT OMG! Foreign measures......... /s
Ironically one of the very few reasons a Union of State's government was created was to deal with National Affairs. Apparently it's reason for existing is the BIGGEST curse and not it's compulsive actions of non-reasons for existing.
Especially when anyone speaks of funding that National Affairs government on the National-trade Market... OMG! but, but Foreign trade!/s
Neither Cato nor Reason support “free trade”.
IIRC from the post a few months back over at Cato regarding this, the MARAD fools did not just claim this to be treason, but capital treason. Talk about hyperbolic hyperbole!
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